2.Old Testament and Semitic Studies in Memory of William Rainey Harper by William Rainey Harper (1908)"... tenses being ambiguous (the imperfects may be taken aoristically, and the
perfects prophetically; ... 16, which are rendered aoristically, and "'35"n^ ..."

3.A Polyglot Grammar: Of the Hebrew, Chaldee, Syriac, Greek, Latin, English by Samuel Barnard (1825)"... for •whilst of the perfect we can say *-«re»j*«, / have done, (the verb itself
expressing present accomplishment, whilst we say aoristically I did it, ..."

4.Classical Philology by University of Chicago press, JSTOR (Organization) (1906)"... six of which may be taken aoristically, and asserts that the tense is in all
used "in voller ..."

5.The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1810)"... and the Greeks often use their first aorist when they mean to speak aoristically
of time present, though that tense properly belongs to time past. ..."

6.Lectures on the English Language by George Perkins Marsh (1887)"... and even the forma grammatically expressive of time are, in general propositions,
employed aoristically, or without any reference to time. ..."

7.Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind by James Mill (1869)"At least, it often expresses it aoristically, without distinction of tense. "
To love" is as abstract a name as " love," " to fear," as " fear" : they are ..."